St. Joseph's College, Devagiri

St. Joseph's College (Autonomous), Devagiri
MottoLatin: Pro Deo Et Patria
("For God and Country")
Established1956; 68 years ago (1956)
FounderCMI congregation
PrincipalBoby Jose, Ph.D
Location
Devagiri, Kozhikode, Kerala, India

11°15′55″N 75°50′10″E / 11.2653°N 75.8360°E / 11.2653; 75.8360
AffiliationsUniversity of Calicut
WebsiteSt. Joseph's College, Devagiri

St. Joseph's College(Autonomous), Devagiri, also known as Devagiri College, is a college in Kozhikode, Kerala, India, offering graduation and postgraduation courses in arts and science. Students and alumni are called ‘Devagirians’. The college is in the Devagiri hills about 8 km east of Kozhikode city.[1] It is run by the Carmelites of Mary Immaculate (CMI), an indigenous religious congregation founded in 1831. The college is ranked 60, in All India Ranking by National Institutional Ranking Framework during 2020.[2]

Rankings

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College rankings
General – India
NIRF (Colleges) (2022)[3]59

The college is ranked 61st among colleges in India by the National Institutional Ranking Framework (NIRF) in 2024.[4]

History

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Envisioned by the CMI congregation and established in 1956, St. Joseph's College was. inaugurated by the then-governor of Madras. The college added two postgraduate departments and a sports pavilion within five years of its inception. First affiliated to the University of Madras and then to the University of Kerala, the college is now under the University of Calicut.

Devagiri has turned out more than 200 toppers in university examinations and come out the university athletic champions 17 times.[5]

Academics

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Devagiri had won 15 ranks in an academic year. With ten post-graduate departments. It has four research centres and wings offering M. G. University's off-campus programmes and courses recognized by DOEACC and ICAI. The college has won 150 first and second ranks since 1962. Nearly 100 students have passed the UGC-CSIR and JRF examinations.[6]

Sports

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  • K Abdul Rahiman, Volleyball, represented India in international championships[7]
  • Jose George, Volleyball, 1978 Asian Championship, 1991 Indian Team Coach[7]
  • Jimmy George, Volleyball, 1974, 1978 & 1986 Asian Games, 1977 Arjuna Award winner[7]
  • Pramod Govind, Basketball, 1971, Jr. Indian team[7]
  • M K Manuel, Volleyball, 1979 Asian Championship[7]
  • N C Chacko, Volleyball, 1982 Asian Games[7]
  • George Kuncheria, Athletics, 1986 Pre-Asian Track and Field Silver Medal in Triple Jump[7]
  • Robert Boby George, Athletics, represented India in Triple Jump, National Coach, Dronacharya Award Winner[7]
  • Saju George, Athletics, attended Long Jump Training Programme in the USA[7]
  • Sreesh T R, Volleyball/Beach Volley, 2003 Gold Medal in World Customs Beach Volley Championship[7]
  • Tinu Joseph, Basketball, 2003 Senior Asian Basketball Championship, Qualifying Round[7]
  • Kishore Kumar E K, Volleyball, since 1999 member of Indian Junior and Senior Teams. 2002, Junior Indian Team Captain; 2003, Senior Indian Team Captain; 2003, Captain Jr. team for the World Championship[7]
  • Sanave Thomas, Badminton, 2002 Thomas Cup England. 2002- Commonwealth Games at Manchester. 2003 World Championship – Birmingham.[7]
  • Liju K Abraham, Basketball, 2000 Junior Asian Championship at Kuala Lumpur.[7]
  • Usha Nandini, Handball, 2002 Indian Team Captain in the South Asian Championship at Dhaka. 1995 Best Player in SAF Games, 6 times represented India.[7]
  • Bobit Mathew, Basketball, 2000 Junior Asian Championship at Kuala Lumpur.[7]
  • Rajeev R, Volleyball, 2003- Senior Indian Team for the Matches held at Bulgaria, Romania and Czech Republic.[7]
  • Muralee Krishna A, Basketball, 2003 Senior Asian Basketball Championship at China[7]
  • Vinod S, Volleyball, 2000 Junior Asian Championship. 2003- Senior Indian Team for the matches held at Bulgaria, Romania and Czech Republic.[7]
  • Ratnakaran K, Chess, 2001 Junior Asian Championship at Tehran 3rd Place. Junior World Championship. 2004 won International Master Norm in Commonwealth Championship.[7]
  • AmruthaRaj, Weightlifting, Asian Power Lifting Championship – Silver Medal. World Power Lifting Championship – 9th place[7]
  • Sethumadhavan, Football, Meracca Cup[7]

Facilities

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The six-acre campus of sprawling greenery houses a nursery, a higher secondary school, schools for the physically and mentally challenged, men's and women's hostels, staff quarters and a chapel. The institution has an eight-lane track stadium, an auditorium and an open-air theatre, a computerized library (one of the biggest in Kerala) of about 8,000 books and journals, 47 computers installed in departments and laboratories, and Internet facility. About half of the 75 permanent teachers are PhDs or rank holders. More than a score of forums and clubs supplement the effort of the teachers.[8]

Recognition

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St. Joseph's College, Devagiri is an autonomous college. It has autonomy in all academic matters and from the stage of admission to the conduct of examination to the publication of results. In January 2011, NAAC accredited the college with Grade A (CGPA 3.63). In 2016, the college was re-accredited as the first college to be awarded with A++ grade in the Country with a CGPA of 3.76 on a four-point scale. UGC recognized it as 'College with Potential for Excellence'.

Devagiri College is the topmost NAAC-accredited college in Kerala with the highest CGPA. It is for achievements of this sort that a survey conducted by India Today[when?] zeroed in on Devagiri as one of the best ten colleges in Kerala; SS Music Channel, Chennai singled out Devagiri for a special episode telecast in 2004.[9][10] The college is today considered to be one of the top ten best arts and science colleges in Kerala.

Notable faculty and alumni

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See also

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  • Sidiqe-Lal directed blockbuster 1991 film Godfather (1991) starring Mukesh, all the law college scenes in the film shooting take place in Devagiri St. Joseph's College, Kozhikode.

References

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  1. ^ "The Hindu : Education Plus Thiruvananthapuram : Making the grade in higher education". www.hindu.com. Archived from the original on 4 February 2005. Retrieved 17 January 2022.
  2. ^ "MoE, National Institute Ranking Framework (NIRF)".
  3. ^ "National Institutional Ranking Framework 2022 (Colleges)". National Institutional Ranking Framework. Ministry of Education. 15 July 2022.
  4. ^ "2024 NIRF Ranking" (PDF).
  5. ^ "St. Joseph's College Devagiri".
  6. ^ "St. Joseph's College Devagiri".
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v "Sports Alumni, St. Josephs College, Devagiri". 2 February 2011. Archived from the original on 2 February 2011. Retrieved 7 May 2020.
  8. ^ "St. Joseph's College Devagiri".
  9. ^ "St. Joseph's College Devagiri".
  10. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 July 2011. Retrieved 18 January 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  11. ^ "The Hindu : Kerala / Kozhikode News : Sharing fond memories of college". www.hindu.com. Archived from the original on 8 November 2012. Retrieved 17 January 2022.
  12. ^ "The Hindu : Friday Review Thiruvananthapuram / Interview : It is all in the lines". www.hindu.com. Archived from the original on 23 November 2007. Retrieved 17 January 2022.
  13. ^ "'I want to win IAS' The warrior; Sreedhanya". ManoramaOnline (in Malayalam). Retrieved 7 May 2020.
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